Mineral Transformation and Biomass Accumulation Associated With Uranium Bioremediation at Rifle, Colorado

Li, Li; Steefel, CI; Williams, KH; Wilkins, MJ; Hubbard, SS

HERO ID

2029981

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2009

Language

English

PMID

19708377

HERO ID 2029981
In Press No
Year 2009
Title Mineral Transformation and Biomass Accumulation Associated With Uranium Bioremediation at Rifle, Colorado
Authors Li, Li; Steefel, CI; Williams, KH; Wilkins, MJ; Hubbard, SS
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 43
Issue 14
Page Numbers 5429-5435
Abstract Injection of organic carbon into the subsurface as an electron donor for bioremediation of redox-sensitive contaminants like uranium often leads to mineral transformation and biomass accumulation, both of which can alter the flow field and potentially bioremediation efficacy. This work combines reactive transport modeling with a column experiment and field measurements to understand the biogeochemical processes and to quantify the biomass and mineral transformation/accumulation during a bioremediation experiment at a uranium contaminated site near Rifle, Colorado. We use the reactive transport model CrunchFlow to explicitly simulate microbial community dynamics of iron and sulfate reducers, and their impacts on reaction rates. The column experiment shows clear evidence of mineral precipitation, primarily in the form of calcite and iron monosulfide. At the field scale, reactive transport simulations suggest that the biogeochemical reactions occur mostly close to the injection wells where acetate concentrations are highest, with mineral precipitate and biomass accumulation reaching as high as 1.5% of the pore space. This work shows that reactive transport modeling coupled with field data can bean effective tool for quantitative estimation of mineral transformation and biomass accumulation, thus improving the design of bioremediation strategies.
Doi 10.1021/es900016v
Pmid 19708377
Wosid WOS:000268138000044
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English